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  1. Charles Henry Davis, Jr., a Commander of the U.S. Navy served as Chief Intelligence Officer of the Office of Naval Intelligence from September 1889 to August 1892. During his travels, Davis wrote about his experiences in his journal about London and Copenhagen.

  2. Charles Henry Davis (born Jan. 16, 1807, Boston, Mass., U.S.—died Feb. 18, 1877, Washington, D.C.) was a U.S. naval officer and scientist. Davis spent two years at Harvard before becoming a midshipman, and he returned there for the study of mathematics between sea cruises.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. One of the early advocates was Charles Henry Davis, an enthusiastic good roads man whose central idea went from being ahead of its time to one whose time had passed. Charles Henry Davis was raised in Philadelphia as a Quaker.

  4. REAR ADMIRAL CHARLES H. DAVIS (1807-1877) CHARLES HENRY DAVIS was born January 16, 1807, in Boston, Massachusetts. His education consisted of preparation at the Boston Latin School followed by two years at Harvard University (1821-1823).

  5. Charles Henry Davis (1807--77) was a scientist and Union naval officer in the American Civil War. Born in Boston, Massachusetts, he attended Harvard for two years and left to serve in the United States Navy.

  6. CHARLES HENRY DAVIS 1. 1807 – 1877. Charles Herry Davis nació en Boston, Massachusetts, el 16 de enero de 1807 y murió el 18 de febrero de 1877 en Washington, D.C. Se educó en la Escuela Latina de Boston e ingresó a la Universidad de Harvard en 1821, pero abandonó los estudios en 1823 para ingresar a la Marina, aunque posteriormente ...

  7. Davis is best known as the first superintendent of the American Nautical Almanac Office, 1849–1855. Although his role as the founder of the office has been exaggerated at the expense of Matthew Maury , Davis certainly played a key role as the first superintendent, and again from 1859 to 1861.